The Microsoft Defender team has discovered a coordinated campaign targeting software developers through malicious repositories posing as legitimate Next.js projects and technical assessment materials, ...
Linked to North Korean fake job-recruitment campaigns, the poisoned repositories are aimed at establishing persistent C2 ...
All of the execution paths identified by its research team are designed to trigger during the Next.js devs' normal working ...
PCWorld highlights that Mozilla’s Firefox 148 update addresses over 50 security vulnerabilities, including high-risk memory ...
A malicious NPM package, ambar-src, mimicking a popular JavaScript framework, was downloaded nearly 50,000 times in a few ...
Introduction: The Evolution of Browser Security For two decades, the web browser served as the primary security frontier for digital interactions. The logic was clear: the browser represented the lens ...
Four rogue NuGet packages and one npm package stole ASP.NET Identity data, deployed C2 backdoors, and reached over 50,000 ...
Security researchers at Microsoft said the campaign targets developers who routinely clone public repositories for evaluation, collaboration or recruitment exercises. The attackers publish projects ...
In the same way as businesses all around the world, hackers are making use of AI to bolster the damaging power of their cyber ...
The new tool is designed to help government and enterprise network defenders analyse tens of millions of malware samples at ...
A developer-targeting campaign leveraged malicious Next.js repositories to trigger a covert RCE-to-C2 chain through standard ...